Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidence

The safety of children younger than 10 years on motorized two-wheeled vehicles (MTWs) in low- and middle-income countries receives substantial attention from global road safety advocates. However, there is little empirical evidence available to describe the magnitude of the problem. Therefore, we co...

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Main Authors: Kavi Bhalla, Dinesh Mohan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-03-01
Series:IATSS Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S038611121400034X
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spelling doaj-526deeac1404421a9795412d8a1567372020-11-24T22:41:32ZengElsevierIATSS Research0386-11122015-03-01382839110.1016/j.iatssr.2014.11.001Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidenceKavi Bhalla0Dinesh Mohan1Johns Hopkins International Injury Research Unit, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N Wolfe St, E8138, Baltimore, MD 21205, United StatesTransportation Research & Injury Prevention Programme, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, Room 815 Main Building, 7th Floor, Hauz Khas, New Delhi 110016, IndiaThe safety of children younger than 10 years on motorized two-wheeled vehicles (MTWs) in low- and middle-income countries receives substantial attention from global road safety advocates. However, there is little empirical evidence available to describe the magnitude of the problem. Therefore, we constructed a population-level database of road traffic injury statistics disaggregated by age (<5, 5–9, 10+ years) and mode of transport. Our database included mortality data from 44 countries and 5 Indian cities, and hospital admissions from 17 countries. The MTW fleet in these settings ranged from 2% to 70% of all registered vehicles. We find that children under 5 years averaged 0.05% (SD 0.13%) of all road traffic deaths, and 5–9 year olds averaged 0.11% (SD 0.25%). Even in regions with high prevalence of MTWs, young children comprised at most 1.5% of all road traffic deaths and 5.8% of all MTW deaths. Young children were a slightly larger proportion of all road traffic deaths in countries where MTWs were more common. However, after adjusting for population age structure, this effect was no longer evident. The percentage of child road traffic injuries that are due to MTWs increased with increasing MTW use, but at a much lower rate. Our findings suggest that children may be at lower risk from MTW crashes than previously assumed, and certainly at a lower risk than as pedestrians. Further studies are needed to explain the underlying mechanisms that regulate risk of road users.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S038611121400034XChildrenMotorized two wheeler safety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kavi Bhalla
Dinesh Mohan
spellingShingle Kavi Bhalla
Dinesh Mohan
Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidence
IATSS Research
Children
Motorized two wheeler safety
author_facet Kavi Bhalla
Dinesh Mohan
author_sort Kavi Bhalla
title Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidence
title_short Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidence
title_full Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidence
title_fullStr Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidence
title_full_unstemmed Safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: A review of the global epidemiological evidence
title_sort safety of young children on motorized two-wheelers around the world: a review of the global epidemiological evidence
publisher Elsevier
series IATSS Research
issn 0386-1112
publishDate 2015-03-01
description The safety of children younger than 10 years on motorized two-wheeled vehicles (MTWs) in low- and middle-income countries receives substantial attention from global road safety advocates. However, there is little empirical evidence available to describe the magnitude of the problem. Therefore, we constructed a population-level database of road traffic injury statistics disaggregated by age (<5, 5–9, 10+ years) and mode of transport. Our database included mortality data from 44 countries and 5 Indian cities, and hospital admissions from 17 countries. The MTW fleet in these settings ranged from 2% to 70% of all registered vehicles. We find that children under 5 years averaged 0.05% (SD 0.13%) of all road traffic deaths, and 5–9 year olds averaged 0.11% (SD 0.25%). Even in regions with high prevalence of MTWs, young children comprised at most 1.5% of all road traffic deaths and 5.8% of all MTW deaths. Young children were a slightly larger proportion of all road traffic deaths in countries where MTWs were more common. However, after adjusting for population age structure, this effect was no longer evident. The percentage of child road traffic injuries that are due to MTWs increased with increasing MTW use, but at a much lower rate. Our findings suggest that children may be at lower risk from MTW crashes than previously assumed, and certainly at a lower risk than as pedestrians. Further studies are needed to explain the underlying mechanisms that regulate risk of road users.
topic Children
Motorized two wheeler safety
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S038611121400034X
work_keys_str_mv AT kavibhalla safetyofyoungchildrenonmotorizedtwowheelersaroundtheworldareviewoftheglobalepidemiologicalevidence
AT dineshmohan safetyofyoungchildrenonmotorizedtwowheelersaroundtheworldareviewoftheglobalepidemiologicalevidence
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